DOVER -- The growing use of "bath salts" has caused the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to plan a temporary control on synthetic stimulants in the next month, hoping to pull the chemicals from the public's use. Over the past few months, communities have seen a rise in interest for these products, under names like "Ivory Wave," "Purple Wave," "Vanilla Sky" or "Bliss." The bath salts are also sold in some areas under the guise of "plant food." The products are being sold widely online and in retail shops and outlets. [continues 734 words]
I am writing this in the hopes that I can get some folks to understand more about a bill that was passed by the N.H. House this past spring by a margin of 221-96. House Bill 442 would allow seriously ill patients access to medical cannabis. I am in favor of this bill for several reasons. The right of a patient to unfettered and unrestricted access to the prescriptive advice from their physician is an "unalienable" right. My wife has endured 17 years of treatments for breast cancer and currently is undergoing a therapy that causes her to be constantly nauseous. Her doctor would prescribe cannabis for her as a viable and well-known cure for the side effects of chemotherapy if allowed. The quality of life for people in pain or with serious illness is a freedom that cannot be measured and should be the basis for considering this bill. It can mean the difference between life and death or a life to a patient that cannot withstand the regimens of treatments for terminal or serious ailments. For others, it can mean relief from pain caused by permanent disabilities. For all of us, it means that our trust in our physician's advice is not regulated by the state or federal governments. [continues 65 words]
The Global Commission on Drug Policy says the decades-old U.S. war on drugs has failed. Does that failure extend to the war being fought in New Hampshire on a daily basis by law-enforcement agencies? Law-enforcement officials in Laconia, Concord, Derry and Nashua reject an international commission's conclusion that the "war on drugs" has failed, but suggest tactics might need some tweaking. "Some of the minimum sentences are out of whack," said Laconia police Capt. William Cleary. "There are probably three or four small changes I'd like to see. There are times when people aren't doing as much time as you might think they should." [continues 940 words]
During a recent editorial board meeting Congressman and presidential candidate Ron Paul said his election prospects have improved because more of the American electorate has come around to his way of thinking. In this and prior runs for the Oval Office, Paul has advocated disengagement from foreign entanglements like those in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya and elsewhere. He has called for the money to be spent back home. Domestically he has called for the legalization and regulation of drugs. In addition, he has lobbied for a much smaller federal government, more aligned -- he argues -- with the U.S. Constitution. [continues 375 words]
"The war on drugs has failed," declared the editors of National Review in 1996, back when the nation's foremost conservative periodical promoted ideas more intellectually rigorous than cheerleading for the Republican Party. "It is diverting intelligent energy away from how to deal with the problem of addiction. ... It is wasting our resources, and . it is encouraging civil, judicial, and penal procedures associated with police states. We [here at NR] all agree on movement toward legalization, even though we may differ on just how far." [continues 747 words]
If the definition of hypocrisy is saying one thing while doing another, then the New Hampshire Senate showed the epitome of hypocrisy earlier this month when it tabled HB 442, the medical marijuana bill. With a supermajority of Republicans consisting of 19 out of 24 members, the Senate should have had plenty of power to override any governor's veto. The Republican Party has repeatedly stated that President Barack Obama's health care law is unacceptable because it puts the government between the doctor and the patient. [continues 115 words]
Over the past two weeks, tens of thousands of Mexico City residents took to the streets to protest their country's continuing drug violence. In light of the obvious suffering caused by the continuing violence, we need to re-evaluate the war on drugs. I hate drugs. They ruin the lives of many users and impose severe costs on users' families and communities. Unfortunately, the developed world's criminalization of many drugs has been neither effective nor free from unintended consequences. Though we may wish to judge the war on drugs by the good intentions of those who instigate it, we must evaluate it based on the abysmal outcomes that it has produced. [continues 594 words]
If the definition of hypocrisy is saying one thing while doing another, than the state Senate showed the epitome of hypocrisy when it tabled House Bill 442, the medical marijuana bill. With a super-majority of Republicans (19 out of 24 members), the Senate should have had plenty of power to override a veto by Gov. John Lynch. The Republican Party has repeatedly stated that President Obama's health care package is unacceptable because it puts the government between the doctor and the patient. This week, the Senate chose to keep the government between the doctor and the patient, by dropping the ball on the medical bill that would allow the doctors to decide what medicine works best for their patients. [continues 76 words]
To the editor: Not only should medical marijuana be made available to patients in need, but adult recreational use should be regulated. Drug policies modeled after alcohol prohibition have given rise to a youth-oriented black market. Illegal drug dealers don't ID for age, but they do recruit minors immune to adult sentences. So much for protecting the children. Throwing more money at the problem is no solution. Attempts to limit the supply of illegal drugs while demand remains constant only increase the profitability of drug trafficking. For addictive drugs like heroin, a spike in street prices leads desperate addicts to increase criminal activity to feed desperate habits. The drug war doesn't fight crime, it fuels crime. [continues 80 words]
The New Hampshire House has decided to legalize marijuana for cancer patients. HB 422 allows people with certain qualifying conditions, and with their doctor's recommendation, to use marijuana as a treatment. The bill was introduced by Lancaster Rep. Evalyn Merrick, a cancer survivor, and is sponsored in the Senate by Strafford Sen. Jim Forsythe. It would establish state-licensed alternative treatment centers to provide safe access to medical marijuana. The bill includes strict rules regarding public use, impairment, and driving under the influence. [continues 76 words]
KEENE -- While St. Patrick's Day enthusiasts participated in the "wearing of the green" in downtown Keene Thursday afternoon, a small group of activists celebrated a different type of green at Central Square. Smoking pipes and rolled blunts, activists used marijuana as a way to express "self-ownership," according to one participant. This group of nearly 20 was the first of this year to hold a rally supporting marijuana legalization, but similar demonstrations have been a fixture in Central Square since 2009. [continues 348 words]
The New Hampshire House of Representatives is taking another look at permitting the use of marijuana for medical purposes. The House Health, Human Services, and Elderly Affairs Committee recently endorsed HB 442 by a 14-3 vote. In 2009 Gov. John Lynch vetoed a medical marijuana bill because he felt the distribution and monitoring provisions were not strong enough. Foster's believes that was the right decision then and should be the measure of the current bill. Efforts to properly provide medical marijuana have been made a joke by legalization in California. State lawmakers there may as well have just outright legalized pot, given the lack of controls placed on growing and dispensing it. [continues 209 words]
Marijuana makes for strange bedfellows. Liberal Democrats and libertarian-leaning Republicans are finding common cause in supporting a House bill that would legalize medical marijuana. "This is a bill whose message has been heard loud and clear," said bill sponsor Rep. Evalyn Merrick, a Lancaster Democrat. "I sense we'll have a good deal of support on both sides of the aisle." The Democratic-controlled Legislature passed a bill allowing medical marijuana in 2009, but Democratic Gov. John Lynch vetoed it. The House overrode the veto, but the Senate came up two votes short. [continues 1097 words]
The recreational use of a drug intended to fight opiate dependency is growing in Nashua. Since 2009 there have been 16 Suboxone-related arrests in Nashua five for intent to distribute. Nationally, it is listed as the second-highest cause of accidental deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2007, 27,658 such deaths were reported. Nashua police Lt. Scott Hammond, head of the narcotics division, said it's common for addicts to sell Suboxone to purchase heroin. [continues 545 words]
The New Hampshire Legislature is once again trying to help patients have access to medical marijuana. It is under deliberation by the Health and Human Services and Elderly Affairs Committee, until March 10. Marijuana has been proven to safely and effectively alleviate side effects of cancer-fighting medicines. It has been proven a safe and effective treatment for many ailments, including but definitely not limited to cancer, AIDS, fibromyalgia, glaucoma, anxiety, depression, alcohol addiction, irritable bowel syndrome, multiple sclerosis and muscle spasms. It is cruel to deny any person a safe and effective means of treating an ailment - and beyond words to make them criminals to do so. It is a huge waste of our time, energy, resources and especially tax dollars to arrest, prosecute and penalize sick people. I urge you all to have a heart and contact your legislators. Tell them to vote Yes on HB 442. Wilmot [end]
The New Hampshire Legislature is once again trying to help patients get access to medical marijuana with HB 442, which is scheduled for a hearing before the Health, Human Services & Elderly Affairs Committee on March 10. Marijuana has been proven to safely and effectively alleviate side affects of cancer-fighting medicines. It has been proven to be a safe and effective treatment in many ailments, including but definitely not limited to cancer, AIDS, fibromyalgia, glaucoma, anxiety, depression, alcohol addiction, irritable bowel syndrome, multiple sclerosis and muscle spasms. [continues 76 words]
However one stands on the continued employment of the Keene elementary school teacher who was put on leave pending his prosecution and ultimate conviction for a marijuana-related misdemeanor, the school administration is handling the financial consequences of the matter in the right way. Against its own preferences, the administration was ordered by the school board to keep 3rd grade teacher Darrel L. Beymer on the Symonds School payroll. After complaints by some parents, however, he will return to school in a different job until September, and a substitute will be paid to handle his teaching responsibilities for the remainder of the year. [continues 256 words]
Last Thursday, President Barack Obama took questions submitted online in video and text format in the spirit of his State of the Union address two days earlier. The President has conducted these in previous years, but this year's town hall was a bit different. The most popular video this year was one from retired deputy sheriff MacKenzie Allen, a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP). He took his time to ask the president whether there should come a time for us to discuss the possibility of legalization, regulation and control of all drugs in hopes of an alternative to the current system of zero-tolerance prohibition. Where the President would've laughed this question off to the anxious-to-please audience in D.C. in years past, this year he chose to air and answer Mr. Allen's question. [continues 603 words]
In a recent national survey, more teenagers reported having used marijuana in the 30 days prior to the poll than reported having smoked cigarettes. It was the first time in 30 years that pot outpaced cigarettes. In New Hampshire, recent rates of marijuana use among youth have been among the highest in the country, according to the 2009 New Hampshire Youth Risk Behavior Survey. In that survey, conducted every two years, high school students were asked whether they had smoked pot within the previous 30 days. Since 2003, about 25 to 30 percent have said they had. [continues 473 words]
ROCHESTER -- Drug dog services were brought to Spaulding High School for the first time this school year in early December, Superintendent Mike Hopkins told the School Board Thursday. A routine locker and classroom search was conducted, and Hopkins explained the district has been doing drug searches for around six years now and it serves as a reminder to students of the "no drug" policy. At Thursday's School Board meeting, resident Michelle Paradiso expressed displeasure with this action, saying she was upset to hear her son and his classmates were removed from their classroom so the police and dogs could search their belongings. [continues 346 words]